The JUNO liquid scintillator-based experiment, construction of which is
on-going in Jiangmen (China), will start operations in 2020 and will detect
anti-neutrinos from nearby reactors; but also solar neutrinos via elastic
scattering on electrons. Its physics goals are broad; its primary aim to
measure the neutrino mass ordering demands to collect large statistics, which
requires JUNO's 20 kt sensitive mass, and achieve an unprecedented energy
resolution (3%/E). Thanks to these characteristics, JUNO is in a very
good position to contribute to the solar neutrino studies in the line of
previous experiments of similar technology. It will collect a large sample of
neutrinos from 7Be and 8B. In particular, for 7Be the target energy
resolution will provide a powerful tool to isolate the electron energy end
point from backgrounds like 210Bi and 85Kr. At the same time,
challenges will have to be faced mainly related to the reduction and estimation
of the backgrounds. While a thorough LS purification campaign is being planned,
the desired level of purification is less aggressive than e.g. in Borexino.
Also, cosmogenic backgrounds such as cosmic ray muons traversing the relatively
thin layer of ground above JUNO (700 m) and crossing the detector will need to
be vetoed with dedicated techniques for the extraction of 8B. In my talk I
reviewed JUNO's preliminary analysis strategy and challenges in the solar
neutrino sector; and provided the current estimates of its solar neutrino and
background yields, with related energy spectra, assuming two benchmark
scenarios of scintillator radio-purity.Comment: Proceedings of the 5th International solar neutrino conference,
Dresden, Germany, June 2018. On behalf of the JUNO Collaboration. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1801.0558